Protesters face off in downtown
Cleveland, separated by police
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[July 19, 2016]
By Scott Malone and Kim Palmer
(Reuters) - Protesters for and against
Trump faced off in a plaza a few blocks from the site of the Republican
National Convention in downtown Cleveland on Monday, shouting slogans at
each other but avoiding physical confrontation.
Dozens of protesters were separated by a wall of police that looked
equal in number.
To one side of the police line at the foot of the Key Tower, Cleveland's
tallest building, demonstrators shouted, "Black Lives Matter." From the
other side came, "You're a bunch of anarchists."
The exchanges marked the first emotionally charged demonstration at the
2016 Republican National Convention, where security forces are on alert
for potentially disruptive conflicts.
A combination of intense rhetoric by presumptive Republican candidate
Donald J. Trump, recent police shootings of African- Americans in Baton
Rouge and the Minneapolis area, and the killings of police in Dallas and
Baton Rouge has raised tensions in the run-up to the convention.
Alicia Street, 31, a Black Lives Matter activist from Ferguson,
Missouri, told Reuters that police appeared to outnumber the protesters.
"We don't need all these police. This is just free speech," Street said
shortly after a group of pro-Trump protesters left the area. "They are
going to make people afraid."
Smaller demonstrations were held elsewhere in the downtown area. At
least two protesters were seen carrying firearms. A group of people
identifying themselves as "anti-gay Christians" shouted at a rival
group. One person carried a sign that read, "Stop being a sinner and
obey Jesus."
A speaker at an anti-Trump rally was arrested, but police said it was
unrelated to the campaign.
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Policemen use bicycles to separate anti-Donald Trump protesters
(unseen) from pro-Trump supporters during the Republican National
Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, U.S., July 18, 2016. REUTERS/Adrees
Latif
One protest leader, Kait McIntyre, 27, said organizers from her
group had sought permission for weeks to march outside the protest
zone and only recently received it from the city.
"We wanted to get within sight and sound of the actual convention.
We wanted our voices heard," she said.
(Reporting by Scott Malone and Kim Palmer in Cleveland; Additional
reporting by Daniel Trotta in Cleveland; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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